Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Mitt Romney Survives Crucial Test in Ohio


Super Tuesday: Romney wins Ohio, but Santorum is Committed to fight Against: In a nail-biter Super Tuesday, the favorite Republican presidential Mitt Romney barely repressed rival conservative Rick Santorum in the key battleground of Ohio and won five of the other races on the night of the voters helped to widen its lead delegate sufficient without settling the fight for the nomination.

Romney also notched victories in Alaska, Idaho, Vermont, Virginia and his home state of Massachusetts, while Santorum won North Dakota, Oklahoma and Tennessee, and Newt Gingrich made his home state of Georgia.

"This is an important moment in this election," Romney said in an email fundraising moments after the new projections of the media it would defeat Santorum back in Ohio after scary for much of the night. "We are moving forward with momentum and a clear message to the American people. More jobs, less debt, smaller government and it is this message that will help us defeat Obama in November,"

Eight months after the election, the former Massachusetts governor expanded its already significant lead in delegates to the convention nominating the party standard-bearer bring against President Barack Obama, and made mathematically more plausible rival the appointment of search of his hand.

Santorum, his position as a top conservative rival Romney reaffirmed by the result, has pledged to continue fighting.

"This campaign focuses on the cities left - and the families that these cities are the largest cities of this country did," Santorum said in a hoarse speech, but defiant in Steubenville, Ohio. "It was a big night tonight . Many States. We will win some, we lose some. But it seems now, we'll at least get some gold medals, and a whole passel full of silver. "

"We are ready to win in this country," said Santorum, who has swapped his trademark cardigan sweater for a suit quiet.

At a rowdy meeting in his hometown of Boston, interrupted by chants of "Everything! The Way!" and "Go! Mitt! Go!" Romney celebrated his victories, and has trained his rhetorical fire on Obama's handling of the economy.

"For millions of Americans who look around and see that they can not get jobs and bills they can not pay, I have a message: You have not failed you have a president who n 'And you is not going to change .. " he promised. "For this administration, the number of unemployment is just an awkward statistic, as a second term."

The 10 states in the game is good for 419 of the 1144 delegates needed to clinch the party nomination - more than any previous nomination contest combined.

And analysts were convinced that the results of Alaska, Georgia, Idaho, Massachusetts, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Vermont and Virginia for clues to how best to achieve the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the keys to the White House.

Gingrich faltering campaign got a shot in the arm as the anointed media projected him the winner in Georgia. The former president wasted no time dressing down "media elite" to count time after time.

"It is good. There are lots of rabbits running around. I'm the tortoise. I take one step at a time," he said Callista with the woman beside him in his headquarters in Atlanta as supporters waved "Newt-a-Mania" signs.

Texas Representative Ron Paul, supported by a devoted army of mostly young voters, showed no signs of giving up his long-shot campaign.

Paul, who has not won a state in the nomination battle, the campaign day in Idaho and North Dakota. Speaking at Fargo back so early, the veteran legislator said he was the only candidate for both the male major orthodoxies.

Former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin told CNN television moments after the vote in Alaska they are open to walk in 2016. Later, reportedly told Fox Business Network that his vote for Gingrich.

At the White House, the Republicans of the man doomed to reproduce not giving up the political agenda: Obama held his first solo news conference Tuesday in 2012 and play jokes on this aid insisted was a little accident likely planning.

"Now I understand there are political games being tonight, but I thought I start the day with some questions, which I'm sure this is not political," he said, before blasting his Republican criticism of Iran.

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